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There is not one word in Part 91 relating to "known icing" other than 91.527, which applies to large and turboprop aircraft. The closest you can come is 91.9, so there is nothing to "trump" because the POH wording is not consistent between manufacturers or models (and, as some have pointed out, some POHs say nothing about icing). The west slopes of the Cascades are notorious for icing..the Concorde was sent out here for icing certification. If you can climb (or descend) over the flatlands to the west of Seattle, you can miss the icing zone. The newsletter simply tells pilots that when ATC turns them east on departure, cleared to some altitude that will take them into the ice, they do not have to accept the clearance...nor need they descend into the clouds on the west side simply because a controller clears them to a lower altitude. Bob Gardner "Greg Esres" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > <<Obviously, since this procedure was developed by the FAA and > published in the Safety Program newsletter every year at this time, a > forecast of icing conditions is not, in and of itself, a bar to > flight.>> > > > Hmmmm...You're saying that the Safety Program newsletter trumps the > FARs? >
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